On This Day in HISTORY

900 – Count Reginar I Longneck of Hainault (land now straddles Belgium-France border) rises against Zwentibold of Lotharingia (medieval kingdom which included Holland, Belgium, much of Germany and Lorriane) and slays him near present-day Susteren in the Netherlands

1752 – Maria Carolina of Austria born, Queen consort of Naples and Sicily, the wife of King Ferdinand IV & III and sister of Marie Antoinette; de facto ruler of her husband’s kingdoms, she oversaw many reforms, including revocation of a ban on Freemasonry, enlargement of the navy, and expulsion of Spanish influence; a believer in enlightened absolutism until the French Revolution, during which she made Naples a police state

1792 –French Royal family imprisoned, King Louis XVI declared enemy of the people

1792 – Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen born, Queen consort of English King William IV, Adelaide, South Australia, is named for her

1818 – Lucy Stone born, abolitionist, women’s rights pioneer and author; co-organizer of the first National Women’s Convention; co-founder of the American Woman Suffrage Association; and founder of the Woman’s Journal

1820 – Sir George Grove born, English writer and editor; notable for multivolume Dictionary of Music and Musicians

1829 – Martha J. Lamb born, American author, editor, historian and reformer; owner-editor of The Magazine of American History; co-founder of the Home for the Friendless and the Half-Orphan Asylum; secretary of the United States Sanitary Commission

1831 – Salomon Jadassohn born, German composer and pianist

1849 – Leonora Kearney Barry born in Ireland, American labor reformer and women’s rights activist, only woman to hold national office in the Knights of Labor

1851 – Felix Adler born in Germany, American professor of political and social studies; social reformer/founder of the NY Society for Ethical Culture, based on belief in “deed rather than creed”; founded tuition-free school for children of working-class parents, and a doctor and nurse home visit program for invalids in poor districts

1912 – Salvador Luria born in Italy, American microbiologist; co-winner of 1969 Nobel Prize in Physiology for discoveries in replication mechanism and viral genetic structures

1918 – BMW established as a public company in Germany

1918 – Opha May Johnson is the first woman of 305 to enlist in the U.S. Marine Corps

WWI Marine Recruiting Poster with photo of Opha May Johnson

1920 – The Battle of Warsaw begins in which the Poles will defeat the Soviet Red Army

1931 – The first U.S. community hospital is dedicated in Elk City OK

1933 – Joycelyn Elders born, American physician and research scientist, public health administrator as vice admiral in the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, first African American and second woman appointed as U.S. Surgeon General

1934 – Al Capp’s comic strip “L’il Abner” makes its newspaper debut

1937 – The Battle of Shanghai between the Republic of China and the invading Imperial Japanese Army, the first major engagement in the Second Sino-Japanese War

1942 – Disney’s Bambi premieres at Radio City Music Hall NYC

1954 – Radio Pakistan broadcasts “Qaumī Tarāna”, the national anthem of Pakistan for the first time

1960 – The Central African Republic declares independence from France

1960 – The first two-way phone conversation by satellite takes place using Echo 1, NASA’s first telecommunications balloon satellite, launched the day before

1965 – Jefferson Airplane debuts at San Francisco’s Matrix Club

1967 – U.S. premiere of Bonnie and Clyde, with Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway

1976 – International Left Hander’s Day * is launched by Left Handers International

1981 – President Reagan signs into law the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, which cut corporate taxes, increased military spending, and slashed domestic programs. The Federal Deficit doubled from $20 trillion to $40 trillion. An Orrin Hatch-sponsored rider, the Adolescent Family Life Act, enabled federal money to be used for promotion of abstinence, and for religious instruction on sex in public school sex education classes. In 1987, the Supreme Court partially upheld an ACLU court challenge to AFLA, stopping the religious instruction on sex in public schools

1986 – Lionel Richie releases his album Dancing on the Ceiling

1993 – U.S. Court of Appeals rules that Congress must save all e-mails

1996 – Microsoft releases Internet Explorer 3.0

1998 – A monument to the 255 people killed trying to cross the Berlin Wall is dedicated

2003 – Libya agrees to a $2.7 billion compensation fund for the families of the 270 people killed in the 1988 Pan Am bombing

2004 – The 28th summer modern Olympic games open in Athens

2010 – National Spirit of ‘45 Day * is official – U.S. Congress passes a joint resolution on the 65th anniversary of the end of WWII , the fruition of a project begun in 1996 by Warren Hegg and the Spirit of ’45 Organization (always second Sunday in August)

2012 – Taylor Swift releases single “We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together” in U.S.

2014 – Maryam Mirzakhani wins the Fields Medal for Outstanding Discoveries in Mathematics, becoming the first woman and first Iranian to win the award

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About wordcloud9

Nona Blyth Cloud has lived and worked in the Los Angeles area for the past 45 years, spending much of that time commuting on the 405 Freeway. After Hollywood failed to appreciate her genius for acting and directing, she began a second career managing non-profits, from which she has retired.
Nona has now resumed writing whatever comes into her head, instead of reports and pleas for funding. She lives in a small house overrun by books with her wonderful husband and a bewildered Border Collie.